Oh I mean removing money from them via whatever they pay you means some of their wealth got put back into the economy. Via tax avoidance and shit like the only real payouts most companies make are to suppliers, employees, and utilities. None of that is going to go to small businesses except possibly the money given to the employees. If I get paid say 30k and I manage to put 20k of that back into local small joints or other individuals they're able to also spend some of that locally and so forth maybe 10k of what I spent ends up local once again. When money hits to coffers of a giant multinational it usually gets stuck, that's the problem, there's low liquidity for the average person.

If I give exxon $30 to fill my car up that $30 is just going to sit in a bank account and add to Exxon's bottom line before being paid as a dividend to a shareholder billionaire and then sit in his bank acct for like years and years. Money spent local is going to change hands a few times usually before it goes back to the multinational. $30 spent on food at the farmers market will probably have $20 paid to workers and maybe they get $10 to someone else small... that $30 became $60 because it was used more than once.